CATEGORIES

Life in Lilliput
Country Life UK

Life in Lilliput

In a room in West Sussex, magic is being created from pieces of cardboard, plastic bottles, pen lids, crayons and glue. Mark Palmer meets William Davies, film animator turned miniature-home maker

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4 mins  |
December 02, 2020
That'll do, pug
Country Life UK

That'll do, pug

Game and gutsy, you dismiss the jovial little pug as a lapdog at your peril, finds Flora Watkins, although do beware the snoring

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7 mins  |
December 02, 2020
The urban village
Country Life UK

The urban village

Once a swathe of bucolic landscape desired by London’s elite, Hackney is now one of the city’s most cosmopolitan and diverse boroughs, finds Carla Passino

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5 mins  |
December 02, 2020
THE CAPITAL ACCORDING TO...Jackson Boxer
Country Life UK

THE CAPITAL ACCORDING TO...Jackson Boxer

Rob Crossan talks to the dynamic chef behind Brunswick House Café and Orasay about custard tarts and feeding London’s masses

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2 mins  |
December 02, 2020
History and modernity
Country Life UK

History and modernity

A house that might have vanished beneath London’s spreading suburbs has been lovingly returned from institutional use and forms the heart of an estate within the capital. John Goodall reports

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8 mins  |
December 02, 2020
Dancing in the moonlight
Country Life UK

Dancing in the moonlight

Long thought to influence our behaviour, as well as that of the sea and all flora and fauna, the mystical power of the moon continues to exert a hold on us, observes Jeremy Hobson

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6 mins  |
December 02, 2020
Nanny knows best
Country Life UK

Nanny knows best

Norland nannies have cared for the children of the great and good for almost 130 years, but behind the white gloves and starched uniforms lies a most progressive institution, finds Flora Watkins

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4 mins  |
December 02, 2020
DIG DEEP
Country Life UK

DIG DEEP

The team behind Europe’s largest construction project is building new tunnels beneath London’s roads every week, but another group is working with them, too. Harry Wallop talks to the Crossrail archaeologists about woolly mammoths and Roman roads

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5 mins  |
December 02, 2020
Say Yes To The Old Dress
Country Life UK

Say Yes To The Old Dress

Our forebears did it out of necessity, but we are returning to their ways out of a desire to preserve the planet for future generations. Claire Jackson investigates the return of our make-do-and-mend mentality

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10+ mins  |
November 18, 2020
Fortified planting
Country Life UK

Fortified planting

Noel Kingsbury meets the maker of a remarkable coastal garden that combines the use of native species with more familiar garden plants to great effect

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6 mins  |
November 18, 2020
Wee three kings
Country Life UK

Wee three kings

We are all familiar with the diminutive wren, yet its tiny fellow kinglets the goldcrest and firecrest are, perhaps understandably, often overlooked. Ian Morton studies our smallest birds

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5 mins  |
November 18, 2020
The winners are…
Country Life UK

The winners are…

For the second year, Historic Houses and COUNTRY LIFE joined forces with Neptune to find great examples of new kitchens in old spaces. Last week, John Sims-Hilditch, co-founder of Neptune, announced the joint winners and a runner-up, all of whom have found highly inventive solutions to the challenge of creating a 21st-century kitchen in a listed building

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1 min  |
November 18, 2020
Country Life UK

Beautiful Britain

Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty

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2 mins  |
November 18, 2020
At your convenience
Country Life UK

At your convenience

It might be the smallest room in the house and the butt of many a joke, but it is surely one of the most revealing. Bronwen Riley investigates the smartest loos in the land

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7 mins  |
November 18, 2020
Seeing is believing
Country Life UK

Seeing is believing

Exquisitely crafted from hand-dyed silks and velvets, Anne Tomlin’s uncannily realistic flower pieces possess a beauty that will never fade, discovers Natasha Goodfellow

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5 mins  |
November 18, 2020
Finding new purpose
Country Life UK

Finding new purpose

The re-use of architectural materials and elements has a long and surprising history that’s all too easy to overlook, as John Goodall explains

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3 mins  |
November 18, 2020
Country Life UK

Baroque delights

A major restoration project, winner of a Georgian Group award in 2019, has revived a magnificent house inspired by the architecture of Baroque Rome. John Martin Robinson reports

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9 mins  |
November 18, 2020
A work of history
Country Life UK

A work of history

Two homes with substantial stories to tell prepare to hit the market in North Yorkshire and Devon

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5 mins  |
November 18, 2020
Country Life UK

The Acer Up Our Sleeves

Condemned as a weed tree, the sycamore is blamed for leaves on the line and sticky windscreens, but are we overlooking a pollution-tolerant specimen that plants itself for free, asks Jack Watkins

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6 mins  |
November 11, 2020
They Kept The Show On The Road
Country Life UK

They Kept The Show On The Road

Frustratingly, the curtain has fallen on stages everywhere, but there have been some valiant efforts to bring entertainment–and a superb new biography of a great playwright

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5 mins  |
November 11, 2020
Country Life UK

To Italy For The Roses

Gardeners like plants that do well for them and, for the Italians, there is no flower more adored than the rose. They have become connoisseurs, says the rosarian Charles Quest-Ritson, creating some of the finest rose gardens in the world

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7 mins  |
November 11, 2020
Country Life UK

Deck The Halls With Homegrown Holly

Even on the darkest days, there is always fresh foliage to pick, but plant with winter in mind and you can adorn your house with scented flowers, gleaming leaves and bright berries, says Val Bourne

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5 mins  |
November 25, 2020
The long way home
Country Life UK

The long way home

Struck down by Covid-19 earlier this year, Robin Hanbury-Tenison spent five weeks in a coma and was close to death. Now, he is valiantly fundraising for more of the healing hospital gardens he believes helped save him

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4 mins  |
November 11, 2020
The Glorious Dead
Country Life UK

The Glorious Dead

This year is the centenary of the unveiling of the Whitehall Cenotaph on Armistice Day in 1920. John Goodall explains how this famous monument came into existence and became a fixture in the nation’s consciousness

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4 mins  |
November 11, 2020
Treasure island
Country Life UK

Treasure island

JW Marriott Maldives

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2 mins  |
November 11, 2020
Country Life UK

Making a point

The first obelisk to be erected in Europe was a trophy of war. Loyd Grossman considers how these ancient monuments came to be understood and became the mark of every great city

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6 mins  |
November 11, 2020
March of the ants
Country Life UK

March of the ants

Insects are seldom loved and are often loathed, feared or disregarded, but they are an integral part of our ecosystem. In an extract from his new book, Framing Nature, Laurence Rose joins the effort to save the narrow-headed ant

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9 mins  |
November 11, 2020
Country Life UK

Changing views

Environmental art is all the rage, but, for landscape painters, it was never out of fashion. Laura Gascoigne finds out why

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9 mins  |
November 11, 2020
Away with the fairies
Country Life UK

Away with the fairies

One hundred years ago, two girls convinced the world they had photographed fairies at the bottom of their garden. However did they get away with it, asks Richard Sugg

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4 mins  |
November 11, 2020
Let's Drink To The Château D'yquem Of Apples
Country Life UK

Let's Drink To The Château D'yquem Of Apples

A Visit to a well-organised apple store in November is always a wonderful experience. The early eaters that, although lovely, will not keep, are a distant memory. We now see before us those sterling kinds that ripen on the tree in October, but whose flavour and texture will improve with proper storage—cool, dark, frost-free— and will keep in good order until at least the following March.

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3 mins  |
November 25, 2020